1 / 26

Disclaimer

Disclaimer.

bona
Download Presentation

Disclaimer

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Disclaimer This presentation is intended only for use by Tulane University faculty, staff, and students. No copy or use of this presentation should occur without the permission of Tulane University. Tulane University retains all intellectual property interests associated with the presentation. Tulane University makes no claim, promise, or guarantee of any kind about the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of the content of the presentation and expressly disclaims liability for errors and omissions in such content.

  2. Tulane University Medical Group Outpatient Time-Based Codes NOTE: Print the Outpatient Time-Based Codes file before viewing this slide presentation. The file contains a handout and the quiz for this topic.

  3. Read Before Proceeding Physicians and Staff may earn one compliance credit by viewing this presentation, completing the assessment, and faxing the assessment to the University Privacy and Contracting Office: 504-988-7777 This presentation may be viewed for compliance credit only once in a fiscal year (July 1 - June 30). To check how many compliance credits you have and to see which training sessions you have completed, contact the University Privacy and Contracting Office at 504-988-7739

  4. It is the policy of TUMG to provide healthcare services that are in compliance with all state and federal laws governing its operations and consistent with the highest standards of business and professional ethics. Education for all TUMG physicians is an essential step in ensuring the ongoing success of compliance efforts.

  5. Part 1: Overview of Basic Principles Part 2: Documenting a History Part 3: Documenting an Exam Part 4: Documenting Medical Decision Making Part 5: Documenting Consults Part 6: Documenting Pre-Operative and Confirmatory Consults Part 7: Time-Based Codes Part 8: Linking to Resident Notes Part 9: Modifiers 24 and 25 This education is Part 7 of a 9-part series on documenting and selecting the level of service for outpatient visits. All presentations are available on the Tulane University Privacy and Contracting Office website: http://tulane.edu/counsel/upco/billing-ed/

  6. Sources Cited • Know the rules when billing E/M visits based on time. Excerpt from Medicare Part B News, July 9, 2001, pages 5-6 • Medicare Resident and New Physician Guide. Seventh edition, page 71, 2003. • Documentation Guidelines • For the 1995 Principles and Guidelines • http://www.cms.hhs.gov/MLNProducts/Downloads/1995dg.pdf • For the 1997 Principles and Guidelines • http://www.cms.hhs.gov/MLNProducts/Downloads/MASTER1.pdf

  7. Purpose of this Presentation • To provide a review of the documentation guidelines for outpatient time-based codes • To provide documentation examples • To provide CPT average times for codes 99201-99205, 99211-99215, 99241-99245 • To assist physicians in determining whether a time-based code is appropriate for the service provided

  8. What do the Documentation Guidelines Say Regarding Time-Based Codes? • In the case where counseling and/or coordination of care dominates (more than 50%) of the physician/patient and/or family encounter (face-to-face time in the office or other outpatient setting or floor/unit time in the hospital or nursing facility), time is considered the key or controlling factor to qualify for a particular level of E/M services. Source: Medicare Resident and New Physician Guide, page 71, 7th edition, 2003.

  9. What do the Documentation Guidelines Say Regarding Time-Based Codes? Documentation Guideline: If the physician elects to report the level of service based on counseling and/or coordination of care, the total length of time of the encounter (face-to-face or floor time, as appropriate) should be documented and the record should describe the counseling and/or activities to coordinate care. Source: Medicare Resident and New Physician Guide, page 71, 7th edition, 2003.

  10. Can this visit be billed as a time-based service? I saw the patient for a severe exacerbation of rheumatoid arthritis. I spent 25 minutes counseling the patient about her condition.

  11. No • Total time and time spent in counseling must be documented to bill a time-based code. • The counseling documentation was not detailed enough.

  12. When and How Often Are Time-Based Codes Appropriate? • Time based coding is an option for a provider IF the patient’s situation requires counseling and/or coordination of care. Time based codes are not to be used to avoid documenting E/M key components. • It is estimated (Medicare Part B Newsletter excerpt) that 20% of patient encounters might be time-based encounters as opposed to a typical E/M (HX-EX-MDM) encounter.

  13. What elements must be documented? • The documentation must clearly state the total time of the visit and that counseling and/or coordination of care comprised more than 50% of the visit. • The note must provide some detail of the counseling that establishes and supports medical necessity for the service.

  14. How do I document the time element of a time based code? • There are two ways to document time for a time-based code: • Document total time of visit in minutes and total time of counseling and/or coordination of care minutes OR • Document total time of visit in minutes and document that over 50% of total time was spent in counseling and/or coordination of care for the patient.

  15. Examples of time element documentation • I met with the patient for 20 minutes and counseled her for over 50% of that time. • The office visit was 25 minutes and 15 minutes were spent counseling the patient.

  16. How do I document the counseling element of a time-based code? • The note must reflect what was discussed with the patient and/or family • It must be patient-specific • Use of “canned” or template notes is discouraged as they may not support medical necessity

  17. What can be considered counseling? • Discussion of recommended diagnostic studies • Test Results • Discussing a patient’s prognosis • Treatment Options • Counseling on Risk Factor Reduction • Instructions to Patient and/or Family • Patient Family Education

  18. What cannot be considered counseling? • Time spent with the patient talking about issues not related to treatment. • Resident or other Staff Time • Non-face-to-face time.

  19. Must E/M Key Components (HX-EX-MDM) be documented when coding based on time? • When coding based on time, E/M key components (History, Exam and Medical Decision Making) do not have to be documented. Physicians may or may not document E/M components. • Note: A visit may not start out as a time-based visit, but may turn into one due to lengthy and unplanned discussion.

  20. How much documentation of counseling is needed? • When coding based on time, the documentation of the counseling must support medical necessity. Use of a template to document counseling is not advised unless the template allows for detailed documentation of counseling.

  21. How much documentation of counseling is needed? • When coding based on time, any detail that can be included (patient’s questions, family questions, specifics about diagnosis, treatment options, risk reduction factors) will help to support medical necessity.

  22. Examples of Counseling Documentation • Spoke with patient regarding long-term outlook for insulin-dependent diabetes including lifestyle changes, dietary restrictions and importance of compliance with treatment. • Responded to patient’s questions regarding quality of life issues including pain management, living will and hospice-care.

  23. Examples of Time Based Documentation • I saw the patient for 45 minutes and spent over 50% of the time counseling the patient on the pros and cons of chemotherapy alone or chemotherapy and radiation. • Met with patient and spouse for 30 minutes. Twenty minutes spent in discussion of accommodations that would assist in the resumption of daily activity. Documentation doesn’t have to be Gone With The Wind, but must be detailed enough to support Medical Necessity.

  24. CPT Times for E/M Services Example: To bill a 99204 time-based code, a physician would have to spend 45 minutes face-to-face with the patient and spend at least 23 minutes counseling the patient.

  25. Know who to contact: • TUMG Business Services • Compliance Reporting Hotline: 504-988-5142

  26. End of Presentation: To Earn Compliance Credit: Complete and Sign the “Time- Based Codes” Quiz Fax to: 504-988-7777

More Related